Ghazanfar AbdullahComing from a Muslim background, my instinct was to steamroller my wife and hate a Jew. But my wife wasn't having any of it. Women give good advice, and it often balances the arrogant, testosterone-driven goals that we men tend to set for ourselves. y wife was hard to deal with, but I loved, honored, and respected her, and she helped me grow in every aspect of my life. The best advice for the Taliban is that they should love their wives the way Jesus loved the church, and he died for the church. Adam Elsayed is a 27 year old, successful pharmaceutical representative who calls on my office. His father, a Muslim, left his family to start another family, when Adam was only 10 years old. Adam came to know about his father's parallel family only about a year before I met him. "Not cool," Adam opined. I could feel his pain, but in a strange sense we needed each other: he needed a father figure, and I needed to grow my spiritual family. This book represents a running text conversation which culminates in Adam excepting Jesus Christ as his Savior. Now it is confirmed that spiritual bonds are stronger than biological roots. 22 years ago, when I first became a Christian, I cried out to the Lord for reconciliation with my Muslim relatives. In a moment of extreme clarity, I heard a soft, still voice say, "I am your family! And your sisters and brothers in the church are your real sisters and brothers. They are also your family." Read More Read Less
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